APP is a network of women across the UK who have experienced postpartum psychosis and who want to increase public awareness and research into the condition. Postpartum Psychosis (also called 'Puerperal Psychosis' or Postnatal Psychosis') is a severe mental illness which has a sudden onset in the first few weeks following childbirth.
Over 1300 women experience PP each year in the UK. For women, their partners, friends and family it can be hard to find high quality information.APP is run by a team made up of academics, health professionals and women who have recovered from PP.
Our aims are:
- To provide up to date research information to women who have experienced PP and their families.
- To facilitate research into all aspects of PP
- To increase awareness of PP – its symptoms, management and impact – among health professionals and the general publicDate Added: Thu 11th Mar 2010

Animated Minds
Animated Minds is a series of short animated documentaries which use real testimonies of teenage experiences of mental distress, combined with engaging visuals, to climb inside the world of young people struggling with issues such as anxiety disorders, self-harm and depression, eating disorders and Asperger’s syndrome.Date Added: Fri 26th Feb 2016

Ashgate Publishing has a very generous offer for members of the MLN.
Ashgate Publishing are offering the members of The Madness and Literature Network 20% discount on a selection of our books which are relevant to your interests.
This discount is exclusive to members. Please email Charley Baker for details (charlotte.l.baker@nottingham.ac.uk)Date Added: Tue 26th Oct 2010

Bethlem Museum of the Mind
The museum cares for an internationally renowned collection of archives, art and historic objects, which together offer an unparalleled resource to support the history of mental healthcare and treatment.Date Added: Fri 26th Feb 2016

This Bibliography is in four sections: (1) personal accounts of madness written by survivors themselves; (2) narratives written by family members; (3) anthologies and critical analyses of the madness narrative genre; and (4) websites featuring oral histories and other first-person perspectives on madness.

Critical text by Liam Clarke, Reader in Mental Health at the University of Brighton and Madness and Literature Network Member.
This book examines madness in fiction through a variety of chapters, and will be of interest and use to clinicians, literary academics, service users and carers. Array of fiction covered from Shakespeare to William Trevor.Date Added: Mon 26th Apr 2010

FROM THE WEBSITE:
This comprehensive book explores how visual art, cinema, music, poetry, literature and drama can inform the teaching and practice of psychiatrists and mental health professionals. Edited and written by a team of expert practitioners, teachers and researchers, including both clinicians and users of mental health services, this comprehensive book will provide valuable insights for undergraduate and postgraduate educators with teaching reponsibilities in psychiatry and mental health. Students of the medical humanities, art, music and drama therapists, and educators in occupational therapy and psychology will also find this a valuable and insightful handbook.Date Added: Thu 20th May 2010

Link to 'Mindreadings: Literature and Psychiatry' edited by Femi Oyebode. An excellent collection of papers looking at the use of literature in psychiatry, including sections on poetry, autobiography, medical education and specific conditions.Date Added: Mon 8th Feb 2010

'Psychiatry PRN' is a psychiatry textbook with a difference. Edited by Sarah Stringer, Laurence Church, Susan Davidson and Maurice Lipsedge, and with contributions from Charley Baker, it contains a balanced and realistic approach to all aspects of clinical psychiatry along with sections on the reality of assessment, diagnosis and treatment, hints and tips for medical exams and sections of cultural references to psychiatry which include literature and film.Date Added: Mon 11th May 2009

Centre for Medical Humanities in Durham, UK. One of the UK's few Medical Humanities hubs, an excellent resource which links with the Association for Medical Humanities Conference. Also links to some of the key academics in the UK working in this field.Date Added: Mon 18th May 2009

UK based charity, running vital phone/email and text helplines for children and adolescents affected by a range of issues from abuse to homelessness, drugs to bullying. Also has pages of information on the website for children looking for information and support around mental health issues written in understandable, neutral and teen/child-friendly language.Date Added: Wed 10th Feb 2010

From website:
'Chipmunkapublishing is the Mental Health Publisher. Our mental health books give a voice to writers with mental illness around the world. Most of our mental health books are written by people with mental health issues. We also give a voice to family members of people with mental health issues and other disabilities. Titles include autobiographies/memoirs, fiction, poetry, anthologies, stories written by carers, self help books, academic works and much more.'Date Added: Mon 8th Feb 2010

City Arts is a creative enterprise and charity based in Nottingham and founded in 1977. We work with people from local communities, using creative arts to build confidence, well being, skills and enjoyment. Our activities bring people together, stimulate change and create stronger, healthier communities. Our projects include working in arts and wellbeing, with refugee and asylum seeker artists, young people and the wider community.Date Added: Mon 8th Feb 2010

Counselling Directory is a confidential service that encourages those in distress to seek help. The directory contains information on many different types of distress, as well as articles, news, and events. To ensure the professionalism of our website, all counsellors have provided us with qualifications and insurance cover or proof of membership with a professional body.Date Added: Wed 2nd Jul 2014

From Website:
The Creative Research Center (CRC) is a born-digital, dynamic, nimble, open-source, collaborative space -- a Web forum to stimulate, reinvigorate, promote and publicize Very Large-Scale Conversations.
While the CRC lives in the College of the Arts of Montclair State University, the arts are not the sole proprietors of imaginative thinking. The reason-for-being of the Creative Research Center, thus, is to inspire discussion of shared commonalities of imagination and creativity across all fields of knowledge, including (but not exclusively) the expressive arts. The environment of Montclair State as an aspirational public university, therefore, is the ideal place to incubate such a Center.
The CRC has far-reaching curatorial, editorial and outreach intentions including breaking down "silos" which frequently exist among academic colleges, departments and programs. Outside our familiar academic culture lies a vast, fraught, and endangered world. Daily occurrences on the big stages of our overstressed society and natural environment effect – in ways writ large and small – the way men and women in the post-9/11 generation live their lives. It is imperative that academia (and humankind) use creativity to bridge communication wherever possible.
Aiming for a public audience, the first challenge of the new CRC is to spark engaged, interactive (and intergenerational) discourse, crossing over academic boundaries to address real-world issues. One of the first great American trans-disciplinary (actually transcendental) thinkers, Ralph Waldo Emerson, said it well, back in 1862, "It is impossible to extricate oneself from the questions in which your age is involved. You can no more keep out of politics than you can keep out of the frost."
The CRC encourages conversation about the permeable membrane between public, political and so-called private worlds and spheres; and explores the impact of large contexts upon the intimate content of our thoughts and character, no matter what intellectual and imaginative roads are pursued. Marshall McLuhan announced almost a half-century ago that "the medium is the message." In this spirit, the Creative Research Center (in its greatest context) looks forward to "hearing from you."Date Added: Tue 3rd Aug 2010

Depression as a Spiritual Journey by Stephanie Sorrell, published by O Books September 2009.
From the author:
This work is embedded in my own search for meaning and answers through depressive illness. The search began at 17 and is ongoing. Although I use a spiritual model for this work, it is not necessarily a religious one as spirituality embraces all levels of being and relationship.
Within this context I include the medical and psychological model as, from my experience, there has been shame in having depression if following a spiritual path, and ambivalence towards medical and psychological ways of meeting depression.
I also explore mythology in the form of Persephone and the Underworld, Odysseus and the Hero’s journey and bring these into the present day.
The book is extensive in breadth and depth in looking at suicide and spirituality in both the young and the old and creative. On fact, often the process of depression overlays the creative process.
I also look at Psychiatrist, Stanislav Grof’s, work on Spiritual Emergency to Spiritual Emergence. Additionally, I explore the whole process of suffering through the major religions and come back to ‘soul’ where our word ‘psyche’ emerges from. I also look at St John of the Cross’ ‘Dark Night of the soul’ through the twin lenses of ‘dark night of the senses and the Spirit’ And my question is are we, on a world level, undergoing a dark night of the senses which seems to be an integral part of the spiritual journey ? And how de we find our way back to meaning, purpose and value, which ‘depression’ can rob of us ?
I include a preliminary section on ‘Asking the Right Questions’ which was published in the Last ‘Pendulum’ magazine. In these questions I explore the value of depression rather than what it takes away and undermines within us. I look at our mindsets around this and find more creative ways of mirroring this dis-ease of the soul and illness of being in our frenetic world of doing.
I don’t have any easy answers, but I do have tools and lenses through which we can understand depression more fully. And questions themselves open up awareness…. Basically, I have written the book I would have wanted to read in my depths of depression.Date Added: Fri 16th Apr 2010

Equilibrium is a quarterly magazine written and produced by Haringey residents recovering from mental illness, guided by an experienced journalist and graphic designer.
Equilibrium content marries local Haringey information with articles of national importance and is achieving an ever widening readership and a growing reputation among readers interested in mental health.
If you want more information about how to contribute to Equilibrium please contact Polly Mortimer using equilibriumteam@hotmail.co.uk.Date Added: Fri 27th Apr 2012

From the Website:
The aim of this website and the September 2010 workshop is to bring together experts from a variety of fields, including literature, history of medicine, psychology and gender studies to provoke interdisciplinary discussion of the ways in which the creation of more diverse histories of bodily damage in the nineteenth century might open up wider concerns.Date Added: Thu 29th Jul 2010

An excellent website promoting Inter- and multi-disciplinary collaboration and projects. See in particular the Probing the Boundaries section, which includes crucial questions regarding madness and humanity.
FROM HOME PAGE: "Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a forum for the exchange and interaction of ideas, research and points of view that bear on a wide range of issues of concern and interest in the contemporary world. We promote and sponsor inter- and multi-disciplinary encounters by bringing people together from differing contexts, disciplines, professions, and vocations, with the aim to engender and nurture engagements that cross the boundaries of intellectual work. Our projects, conferences and publishing activities are creative and novel, and they evolve constantly as we seek out and foster emergent developments.
Inter-Disciplinary dialogue enables people to go beyond the boundaries of what they usually encounter and share in perspectives that are new, challenging, and richly rewarding. This kind of dialogue often illuminates one’s own area of work, is suggestive of new possibilities for development, and creates exciting horizons for future conversations with persons from a wide variety of national and international settings.
We are committed to the view that inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary work is the only credible way forward in a rapidly changing world. We cordially invite you to be partners in the dialogue."Date Added: Thu 14th May 2009